Worthington's Q1 2026: Contradictions Emerge on WAVE Performance, Gross Margins, ClarkDietrich, and Tariff Impact
Generado por agente de IAAinvest Earnings Call Digest
miércoles, 24 de septiembre de 2025, 11:53 pm ET3 min de lectura
WOR--
The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call
Date of Call: September 24, 2025
Financials Results
- Revenue: $304M, up 18% YOY; excluding Elgen, up ~10% YOY
- EPS: $0.70 GAAP ($0.74 adjusted), vs $0.48 GAAP ($0.50 adjusted) prior year
- Gross Margin: 27.1%, up from 24.3% in the prior year; negatively impacted by a $2.2M Elgen inventory step-up
Business Commentary:
* Revenue and Earnings Growth: - WorthingtonWOR-- Enterprises reportedconsolidated sales for the quarter were $304 million, up 18% compared to $257 million in the prior year quarter. - The growth was primarily driven by higher volumes in the Building Products segment, along with the inclusion of Elgen, which contributed $21 million in sales.- Building Products Market Share and Margins:
- The Building Products segment saw
sales grow by 32%year-over-year, withadjusted EBITDA marginincreasing to31.3%from28.4%in the prior year. The margin improvement was due to volume growth, especially in heating and cooking, and contributions from Elgen, although offset by a nonrecurring purchase accounting charge.
Consumer Product Challenges and Innovation:
- In the Consumer Products segment, sales were
up 1%to$119 million, despite lower gross margin due to tariff charges and lower volumes. The introduction of new products like Balloon Time Mini and the A2L refrigerant cylinders is helping to maintain market share and drive new market growth.
Integration and Synergies with Recent Acquisitions:
- Worthington's acquisition of Elgen in June contributed
$21 millionto sales in Q1, with expectations for synergies and growth in the HVAC and building envelope markets. - The integration of Elgen is progressing well, with the company embracing Worthington's safety culture and capturing synergies.
Sentiment Analysis:
- Management reported a “very solid start,” with sales up 18% YOY, adjusted EPS up to $0.74 from $0.50, and adjusted EBITDA margin at 21.4% vs 18.8% last year. Gross margin expanded to 27.1% from 24.3% despite a $2.2M purchase accounting charge. Building Products grew 32% with WAVE equity income up, liquidity and leverage remain strong (net debt/EBITDA ~0.5x).
Q&A:
- Question from Kathryn Thompson (Thompson Research Group, LLC): What drove wholly owned Building Products margin improvement, and where do you see normalized margins trending?
Response: Better execution and volume in heating/cooking and cooling/construction; water improved; Europe flat; aiming to lift EBITDA margins toward ~12–13% over time, with seasonality.
- Question from Kathryn Thompson (Thompson Research Group, LLC): WAVE outperformance drivers and sustainability into future quarters?
Response: WAVE benefits from strong end markets (education, healthcare, transportation, data centers) and a value-added model; performance expected to remain steady with normal seasonality.
- Question from Kathryn Thompson (Thompson Research Group, LLC): Impact of tariffs given your domestic manufacturing—any wins tied to tariffs?
Response: Tariffs raised Consumer costs by a couple million, but domestic production improves price competitiveness vs imports; ongoing customer wins are hard to quantify but value proposition is improving.
- Question from Dan Moore (CJS Securities, Inc.): Sources of strength in Building Products and ability to outpace market over 1–3 years?
Response: Mix of market normalization and share gains; refrigerant transition (A2L) is expanding the market; expect continued growth from regulatory-driven demand.
- Question from Dan Moore (CJS Securities, Inc.): Consumer new products and retail expansion (Balloon Time Mini, others) and growth runway?
Response: Helium/celebrations offset declines in camping gas/tools; Balloon Time Mini expanding to CVS/Walgreens; Halo Griddles expanding at Walmart in spring 2026; tariffs pressured profitability.
- Question from Dan Moore (CJS Securities, Inc.): ClarkDietrich outlook after lower contribution this quarter?
Response: Near-term flat to down as new construction slows and margins compress; leading indicators (Dodge Momentum) improving but sales lag ~18 months.
- Question from Dan Moore (CJS Securities, Inc.): M&A pipeline and capital allocation priorities over next 12+ months?
Response: Balanced but growth-biased; solid pipeline despite softer markets; targeting niche leaders where Worthington can add channel, manufacturing, and purchasing expertise; Elgen is a template.
- Question from Brian McNamara (Canaccord Genuity): Price versus volume in both segments?
Response: Building Products: volumes up, pricing stable. Consumer: volumes down, mix shifted to higher-priced celebrations; volumes not disclosed due to complexity.
- Question from Brian McNamara (Canaccord Genuity): Are tariffs driving higher shelf prices from competitors, widening price gaps?
Response: Worthington bears tariff costs in Consumer, but shelf pricing impact is mixed; many competitors are still deciding how to respond.
- Question from Brian McNamara (Canaccord Genuity): Gross margin trajectory near term vs 30% medium-term goal?
Response: Q1 GM 27% vs 24% prior year; seasonally weaker Q1/Q2; still targeting >30% over time and SG&A ~20% of sales as initiatives build.
- Question from Susan Maklari (Goldman Sachs): Progress on operational efficiencies (80/20) and where next?
Response: 80/20 in water is reducing complexity and improving focus; expanding to other areas; cost discipline kept SG&A flat YOY ex-Elgen.
- Question from Susan Maklari (Goldman Sachs): How does Elgen support targets and resilience if macro slows?
Response: Elgen added $21M revenue; EBITDA breakeven due to $2.2M purchase accounting; commercial HVAC is resilient; integration strong; cross-sell opportunities across the portfolio.
- Question from Susan Maklari (Goldman Sachs): Balancing growth investments vs potential macro softness next year?
Response: Continuing investment in AI/automation/analytics and DTC; portfolio skewed to RRM and affordable Consumer options; maintain cost discipline to perform through cycles.
- Question from Walter Liptak (Seaport Research Partners): Is A2L refrigerant-cylinder strength a one-year bump or sustainable?
Response: Likely more sustained given ongoing mandates; will meet demand and backfill if initial load-ins normalize.
- Question from Walter Liptak (Seaport Research Partners): Seasonality into fall/winter and spring selling timing?
Response: Q1/Q2 typically weaker; Q3/Q4 stronger; weather events can shift demand; timing varies by category.
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